Karolina Muchova booked her place in her second consecutive US Open semi-final with a 6-1, 6-4 defeat of No.22 seed Beatriz Haddad Maia in one hour and 25
minutes.
The Czech required medical treatment and left the court on multiple occasions in the second set, but kept her focus to close out a victory that marks a remarkable comeback from injury.
“A little weird match, I have to say,” Muchova said in the on-court interview. “I had a lot of problems, I wouldn’t like to comment on it. I’m happy I managed it, to run to the bathroom and back. Sorry if it disturbed anyone, but I had no other choice!”
Muchova’s run to the 2023 semifinals turned out to be the last tournament she would play for another nine months as she underwent wrist surgery. But in just her sixth event since returning to action in June and now ranked No.52, Muchova has roared into the fourth major semi-final of her career without dropping a set.
The result is Muchova’s fourth win in as many meetings with Haddad Maia.
4th semis in a row
Emma Navarro’s first grand slam semi-final will come at the US Open against Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka, someone trying to win her second major trophy of the year and third overall.
Navarro, an American who is seeded 13th, used a stunning turnaround to grab the last six games of her quarter-final match against Paula Badosa for a 6-2, 7-5 victory on Tuesday, following up her upset of defending champion Coco Gauff.
There was no such drama in No. 2 Sabalenka’s 6-1, 6-2 win against No. 7 Qinwen Zheng, the gold medalist at the Paris Olympics last month, in a rematch of Sabalenka’s victory in the Australian Open final.
With Roger Federer in the stands, attending the US Open for the first time since his retirement, Sabalenka displayed a typically powerful performance to get into the semi-finals in New York for the fourth year in a row. In 2023, she was the runner-up to Gauff.
Sabalenka said she saw Federer in the crowd and figured he was there to watch Frances Tiafoe and Grigor Dimitrov in the match that followed hers.
“But still, I was like, OK, I have to play my best tennis so he enjoys it. I have to show my skills, you know, slice skills, come to the net and all that stuff,” Sabalenka, a 26-year-old from Belarus who’s known more for her power, said
with a laugh.
She is trying to become the first woman since Angelique Kerber in 2016 to win the hard-court major titles at the Australian Open and US Open. Sabalenka defeated Zheng in January for a second consecutive title at Melbourne Park.
“I just think the next time I play against her maybe I should hold a rally better and play a little bit more relaxed,” Zheng said.
“Because today obviously I entered into the match with a lot of nerves.”
Navarro was three points from having to go to a third set against Badosa but won the next four points to stay alive, starting a stretch in which she captured 24 of the match’s last 28 points.
“Things weren’t looking great there in the second set, but just tried to be really tough, stick in there, make her hit one more ball,” Navarro said.
“I felt like if I could scrap out a few longer points, maybe put some pressure on her, I felt like I could come back and maybe close it out in two sets. Happy with how I was able to do that.”
Navarro had never even won a match in the main draw of her home major before this year.
Bopanna falls
India’s Rohan Bopanna and his Indonesian partner Aldila Sutjiadi lost to the American pair of Donald Young and Taylor Townsend 3-6, 4-6 in the mixed doubles semi-final.
In the quarter-finals, Bopanna and Sutjiadi had recorded a hard-fought win over Matthew Ebden and Czech Republic’s Barbora Krejcikova.